MAO YUSHI

MAO YUSHI

Mao Yushi, an 83-year-old economist, is one of China’s most outspoken and influential activists for individual rights and free markets. Mao is a well-known advocate for an open and transparent political system, and is one of the pioneers of the movement in China for civil society and freedom. Before economic reform began in China in 1978, he had been an engineer and during his lifetime has faced severe punishment, exile, and near starvation for remarks critical of a command-based economy and society. During the Cultural Revolution, he and his family were deprived of all of their property, and in 2011 he angered some in China with his article “Returning Mao Zedong to Human Form,” which boldly calculated the human cost of Mao’s brutal Communist policies from 1949 to 1976. The article led to calls for his prosecution and execution, with 50,000 left-faction members signing a petition that called for his imprisonment on charges of treason. Immediately following the article’s appearance, he had to be surrounded by students to protect him from physical attack from zealots, while the government remained silent and neutral.

In 1993, Mao and five other economists founded the Unirule Institute of Economics, an independent Chinese think tank committed to the growth of a market economy and to reforming Chinese government policies. In addition, he has been a pioneer in creating private charity and self-help programs in the People’s Republic of China, and has helped countless people become independent members of society through the Fuping Development Institute and other initiatives. He believes that the more income an individual earns the more freedom an individual has, and has devoted himself to China’s transition from a planned economy to a free-market economy.

Mao is the author of 15 books on how a market economy performs. One of these books, Economics in Everyday Life, was a best-seller, explaining market economics in accessible terms for the general population. His writing has provided the public with a better understanding of free markets and has helped clarify and ease the Chinese government’s shift from a planned economy to a market economy.

In 2004, the liberal-leaning magazine Southern People Weekly named Mao Yushi one of China’s 50 most distinguished intellectuals, and in 2007 China Newsweek named Mao and Tsinghua University’s Qin Hui the most influential intellectuals of the decade. His friend Liu Xiaobo, the Nobel Peace Prize recipient in 2010, once wrote of Mao Yushi, his “bravery is worthy of our respect.”

WRITINGS

In developing countries, and especially in those with limited outlets for differing opinions, independent voices are of vital importance. Although such voices face numerous difficulties, they can make a tangible difference. In the decades since China’s market reform and opening to global trade, the Unirule Institute of Economics...